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{{Short description|1990 period of anti-Hungarian violence in Transylvania, Romania}}
]]
{{more citations needed|date=November 2014}}
''']''' (]: ''Marosvásárhely'') is a town in ], ] with an ethnically mixed population that was almost equally distributed between Romanians and Hungarians after the fall of the ] in December 1989.{{#tag:ref|According to Varga E. Arpád, the 1992 population census the city counted 75.851 (46%) ], 84.492 (51%) ] and 3.259 (2%) ] |group="n"}} <ref>Judetul Mures - principalele rezultate ale recensamantului populatiei si al locuintei din 18 Martie 2002, http://www.mures.insse.ro/phpfiles/Analiza_recensamant_2002_Mures_met.pdf; According to the 1992 Census, Targu Mures City had a population of 164,445</ref>In March 1990, short-lived, but violent clashes occurred there between the two ethnic groups in the town, involving ethnic Romanians from neighboring villages, too. These clashes (also called ''Black March'' by some Hungarian authors) left several people dead and hundreds injured. The riots were broadcast nationally on ], and were covered by media around the world.
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}


The '''ethnic clashes of ]''' (also called ''Black March'', {{langx|hu|Fekete Március}})<ref>{{cite book|author1=Ildikó Lipcsey|author2=Sabin Gherman|author3=Adrian Severin|title=Romania and Transylvania in the 20th Century|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AkppAAAAMAAJ|year=2006|publisher=Corvinus Pub.|isbn=978-1-882785-15-5|page=193}}</ref> refer to violent incidents between the ] and ] in ] and surrounding settlements in ], ] in March 1990. The clashes were the bloodiest inter-ethnic incidents of the ] in Transylvania.<ref name='Dutceac'/> Târgu Mureș ({{langx|hu|Marosvásárhely|link=no}}) is a Romanian town with an ethnically mixed population that was almost equally distributed between Romanians and Hungarians after the ] of the ] in December 1989. It has been an important cultural and political center for the Hungarian minority in Transylvania.<ref>{{cite book|editor1=Guntram Henrik Herb|editor2=David H. Kaplan|title=Nested Identities: Nationalism, Territory, and Scale|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ikVCJQIJsNoC&pg=PA279|year=1999|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-8476-8467-0|page=279}}</ref>
It is still widely disputed what exactly triggered the riots. The nature of the involvement of the Romanian government and of Western media is also questioned.


In March 1990, brief but violent clashes occurred there between the two ethnic groups in the town, involving ethnic Romanians from neighbouring villages. The clashes left 5 people dead and 300 injured.<ref name='Dutceac'/> The riots were broadcast nationally on ] and were covered by media around the world.
==Human Rights Watch World report for 1990==
<blockquote>In March, violence broke out between ethnic Hungarians and Romanians in the Transylvanian city of Târgu Mureș. On March 19, the headquarters of the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR) was attacked by a large group of ethnic Romanians. The police and army did not respond to the UDMR's calls for protection until several hours after the attack began. Many ethnic Hungarians trapped inside were seriously injured.<p>


The exact cause is still widely disputed. The roles of the media and the Romanian government are also questioned.
On the following morning, some 15,000 ethnic Hungarians gathered in the town square to protest the previous day's events. A group of approximately 3,000 ethnic Romanians hostile to the Hungarians' demands for autonomy began to gather on one side of the square in the early afternoon. Tensions escalated as word spread that buses of ethnic Romanian peasants from neighboring villages were heading toward town to support the Romanians in the square. By 2:30 p.m., the Chief of Police gave assurances to ethnic Romanian and Hungarian leaders in the square that the police had blocked off entrances to the city. However, unconfirmed reports indicated that the police allowed buses of ethnic Romanians through the roadblocks. Romanian peasants from villages outside Târgu Mureş arrived in the town center long after the roads should have been closed, and joined the Romanians already in the square.<p>

==The events==
{{One source|section|date=June 2013}}
]
]
]
At the beginning of March 1990, two episodes involving Romanian statues occurred. Graffiti was found on the statue of the Romanian historical figure ], and a statue of another Romanian personality in a neighboring town was stolen. A Romanian newspaper referred to events of the same kind that took place before the 1940 Romanian-Hungarian conflict.<ref>{{cite book |title=Ethnic Struggle, Coexistence, and Democratization in Eastern Europe |last= Stroschein|first=Sherrill |year=2012|publisher= Cambridge University Press|location= London|isbn=978-1-107-00524-2 |page=104 }}</ref>

During the celebrations of the Hungarian community on the national day of the Hungarians (]), accusations of ] and ] began to be heard from Romanians.<ref name='Dutceac'>Anamaria Dutceac Segesten, , Lexington Books, 2011, {{ISBN|9780739148679}}</ref>

The next day, groups of heavily intoxicated Romanians began to attack state-owned stores in which ethnic Hungarians had changed the signage to include Hungarian.<ref name='Dutceac'/> Students sang anti-Hungarian songs and pillaged a Hungarian Protestant church.<ref name='Dutceac'/>

On 19 March, Romanian villagers, dispatched by coach and train, arrived in the city and violently attacked the headquarters of the ].<ref name='Dutceac'/> The local Hungarians tried to defend it, and the area fell into violence.<ref name='Dutceac'/> The involvement of the Romanian government in connection with the stimulation of ethnic violence is not completely unfounded (Andreescu 2001, Gallagher, 2005).<ref name='Dutceac'/>

The media enlarged the tensions and contributed, by inflammatory discourse, to the worsening of the situation.<ref name='Dutceac'/> The parliamentary report on the events confirmed that the media reported falsely about the heavy influx of Hungarians to help their co-nationals in their fight for a separate Transylvania.<ref name='Dutceac'/> Incitements about "separatist" trends were used in an effort to manufacture ethnic conflict.<ref name='Dutceac'/>

===Media issues===
The events are viewed differently by the sides that were involved. The 16 March incident at "Pharmacy no. 28" is an example of the capacity of the media to present the same event with opposite connotations. A news brief was presented, by both the Romanian and the Hungarian press, both using it to draw attention to the danger represented by the actions of "the others". Romanian media announced that the pharmacist wiped inscriptions in Romanian, and the Hungarian press wrote that the Romanians wiped the Hungarian inscription.<ref>(Romanian) http://adevarul.ro/locale/targu-mures/targu-mures-conflictul-martie-90-fost-fortat-presa-1_50bd3ed47c42d5a663c8fcef/index.html</ref>

====Romanian media====
{{unfocused|date=June 2013}}
According to the correspondent of the Romanian television, in the neighbouring town of ], a statue of ] was knocked down, generating vehement protests of ], a far-right, ultranationalistic organization.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.napocanews.ro/2010/03/corespondentul-tvr-dorin-suciu-despre-revolutie-si-incidentele-din-martie-1990-de-la-tg-mures.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130629094515/http://www.napocanews.ro/2010/03/corespondentul-tvr-dorin-suciu-despre-revolutie-si-incidentele-din-martie-1990-de-la-tg-mures.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=29 June 2013|title=Corespondentul TVR Dorin Suciu, despre Revoluţie şi incidentele din martie 1990 de la Tg. Mureş|access-date=10 February 2015}}</ref>

Several teams of cameramen from the Romanian army filmed numerous episodes of an explicitly anti-Romanian turn. There were shown groups of Hungarians who chanted "], Horthy!", "Death to Romanians!" and "Transylvania to Hungary!" A 2010 article from ] talks about the influx of 10,000 Hungarian "tourists" who were officially coming to commemorate the Revolution of 1848. There are accounts in the same period of the desecration of the statues of ], ] and some arson attempts on Romanian houses in ]. Such acts have generated counter-manifestations by the Romanian population.<ref name='Jurnalul'>(Romanian) http://jurnalul.ro/special-jurnalul/escaladarea-conflictelor-din-targu-mures-farmacia-si-trabantul-538671.html {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208163701/http://jurnalul.ro/special-jurnalul/escaladarea-conflictelor-din-targu-mures-farmacia-si-trabantul-538671.html |date=8 December 2015 }}</ref>

Also, the "road signs war" started and would continue for years throughout Transylvania. One of the ''Târgu Mureș'' signs at the entry into the city was replaced with a ''Marosvasarhely'' Hungarian sign. The change sparked anger from ] Romanian employees, who restored the Romanian sign.<ref name='Jurnalul'/>

====Hungarian media====
{{expand section|date=June 2013}}

===1990 Human Rights Watch report===
<blockquote>In March, violence broke out between ethnic Hungarians and Romanians in the Transylvanian city of Târgu Mureș. On 19 March, the headquarters of the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR) was attacked by a large group of ethnic Romanians. The police and army did not respond to the UDMR's calls for protection until several hours after the attack began. Many ethnic Hungarians trapped inside were seriously injured.

On the following morning, some 15,000 ethnic Hungarians gathered in the town square to protest the previous day's events. A group of approximately 3,000 ethnic Romanians hostile to the Hungarians' demands for autonomy began to gather on one side of the square in the early afternoon. Tensions escalated as word spread that buses of ethnic Romanian peasants from neighboring villages were heading toward town to support the Romanians in the square. By 2:30 p.m., the Chief of Police gave assurances to ethnic Romanian and Hungarian leaders in the square that the police had blocked off entrances to the city. However, unconfirmed reports indicated that the police allowed buses of ethnic Romanians through the roadblocks. Romanian peasants from villages outside Târgu Mureş arrived in the town center long after the roads should have been closed, and joined the Romanians already in the square.


Around 5:00 p.m., violence erupted between ethnic Romanians and ethnic Hungarians, breaking the single line of 50 police that the authorities had sent to divide the two groups. Although the police and army had been made aware of the potential for violence by both Hungarian and Romanian leaders, who had made numerous reports of the escalating tensions in the square, the authorities once again failed to respond in an adequate manner to protect the citizens of Târgu Mureș.<ref name="nine">Human Rights Watch World Report for the year 1990.</ref></blockquote> Around 5:00 p.m., violence erupted between ethnic Romanians and ethnic Hungarians, breaking the single line of 50 police that the authorities had sent to divide the two groups. Although the police and army had been made aware of the potential for violence by both Hungarian and Romanian leaders, who had made numerous reports of the escalating tensions in the square, the authorities once again failed to respond in an adequate manner to protect the citizens of Târgu Mureș.<ref name="nine">Human Rights Watch World Report for the year 1990.</ref></blockquote>


According to the US State Department Human Rights Report for 1993:
Hungarian organisations strongly criticised the way the Romanian authorities and judicial system dealt with the suspected perpetrators, because significantly higher number of ethnic Hungarians and ] were convicted after the clashes than Romanians. According to the US State Department Human Rights Report for 1993:


<blockquote>The ] condemned the ]'s June 7 rejection of an appeal in the case of Pal Cseresznyés, an ethnic Hungarian serving a 10-year sentence for attempted murder as a result of his involvement in the Târgu Mureș incidents of March 1990. Cseresznyés participated in the savage beating of an ethnic Romanian, which an international journalist captured on film. The UDMR's complaint centered on the length of his sentence and on the fact that he was the only one of those filmed who was brought to trial. The court maintained that, regardless of the fates of the others involved, Cseresznyes had received a fair trial and was guilty as charged. Thus it found no legal reason to grant an appeal.<ref>Human Rights Report, January 31, 1994, US State Department.</ref></blockquote> <blockquote>The ] condemned the ]'s 7 June rejection of an appeal in the case of Pal Cseresznyés, an ethnic Hungarian serving a 10-year sentence for attempted murder as a result of his involvement in the Târgu Mureș incidents of March 1990. Cseresznyés participated in the savage beating of an ethnic Romanian, which an international journalist captured on film. The UDMR's complaint centered on the length of his sentence and on the fact that he was the only one of those filmed who was brought to trial. The court maintained that, regardless of the fates of the others involved, Cseresznyes had received a fair trial and was guilty as charged. Thus it found no legal reason to grant an appeal.<ref>Human Rights Report, 31 January 1994, US State Department.</ref></blockquote>


==Casualties and legal consequences==
==The casualties==
The balance of clashes is five dead (two ethnic Romanians and three ethnic Hungarians), and 278 injured. There were 5 dead (three ethnic Hungarians and two ethnic Romanians) and 278 injured.
During the penal investigation and court trials that followed, two ethnic Hungarians (Pál Cseresznyés and Ernő Barabás) and 7 ] were convicted.<ref></ref> During the penal investigation and the court trials that followed, two ethnic Hungarians (] and ]) and seven others were convicted.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SK7Yy6KAUCYC&pg=PA665|title=Les relations roumano-hongroises dans la perspective de la construction ...|isbn=9782748335705|access-date=10 February 2015|last1=Bustan|first1=René|year=2007}}</ref>


===Emblematic victims=== ===Emblematic victims===
]
There were victims on both sides, two of which received particular attention: There were victims on both sides, two of which received particular attention:
]]]
* On 19 March 1990, the Hungarian writer ] was seriously beaten when ethnic Romanians attacked the offices of the ] (UDMR). With several bones broken and his eyes injured he was carried to the Bucharest Military Hospital, then, later, by a military aircraft to ], ], where his life was saved, but he retained a permanent eye injury. The attackers were never officially identified, or convicted.<ref></ref> * On 19 March 1990, the Hungarian writer ] was seriously beaten when Romanians attacked the offices of the ] (UDMR). With several bones broken and being blinded in one eye, he was carried to the Bucharest Military Hospital, then, later, by a military aircraft to ], ], where his life was saved, but he retained a permanent eye injury. The attackers were never officially identified, or convicted.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/04/AR2006100402032.html|title=Ethnic Hungarian Writer and Activist Andras Suto, 79|newspaper=]|access-date=10 February 2015}}</ref>
* On 20 March 1990, Mihăilă Cofariu, one of the ethnic Romanians from ] village was severely beaten until unconsciousness and even after. As a consequence, he remained neurologically disabled. The event was presented in international media as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians. Mihăilă Cofariu was brought in coma to the county's Emergency Hospital and he spent several months in hospitals in Romania and Germany. One of the perpetrators, ethnic Hungarian Pál Cseresznyés, was tried, convicted, and sentenced to 10 years in prison, but was released in 1996 by Romanian president ], as an act of reconciliation. The other convicted perpetrator, Ernő Barabás, emigrated to Hungary. He has also received a 10-year imprisonment sentence, but the Hungarian authorities denied all extradition requests from the Romanian authorities.<ref></ref>
* On 20 March 1990, Mihăilă Cofariu, an ethnic Romanian from ] village brought to Târgu Mureș along with others to beat Hungarians was severely beaten even after he fell unconscious.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kincses |first=Előd |date=9 June 2021 |title=Véres virradattal a magyar-román együttélés ellen |trans-title=With a bloody dawn against Hungarian-Romanian coexistence |url=https://mandiner.hu/cikk/20210609_veres_virradattal_a_magyar_roman_egyutteles_ellen |journal=Mandiner}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Udvardy |first=Frigyes |title=A romániai magyar kisebbség történeti kronológiája 1990-2017 |trans-title=The chronology of the Hungarian minority in Romania 1990-2017 |url=https://udvardy.adatbank.ro/index.php?action=nevmutato&nevmutato=Mihaila%20Cofariu,%20Mihai%20Cofariu,%20Muhail%20Cofariu |journal=Erdélyi Magyar Adatbank (Translyvanian Hungarian Database)}}</ref> Following that he remained neurologically disabled. The event was presented in international media as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians. He was brought in coma to the county's emergency hospital and spent several months in hospitals in Romania and Germany. One of the perpetrators, ethnic Hungarian Pál Cseresznyés, was tried, convicted and sentenced to 10 years in prison, but he was released in 1996 by Romanian President ], as an act of reconciliation. The other convicted perpetrator, Ernő Barabás, emigrated to Hungary. He has also received a 10-year imprisonment sentence, but the Hungarian authorities denied all requests for extradition from the Romanian authorities.<ref>{{cite web |title=Romania libera - stiri iesite din tipar - actualitate, investigatii, politica, cultura, diaspora, video, anunturi de mica publicitate |url=http://www.romanialibera.ro/a93382/procurorii-unguri-nu-vor-sa-l-dea-pe-agresorul-lui-cofariu.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150211005138/http://www.romanialibera.ro/a93382/procurorii-unguri-nu-vor-sa-l-dea-pe-agresorul-lui-cofariu.html |archive-date=11 February 2015 |access-date=10 February 2015 |work=RomaniaLibera.ro}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Vicepremierul Ungariei, Zsolt Semjén, promite protecţie tuturor ungurilor condamnaţi penal în afara Ungariei |trans-title=Hungarian Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjén promises protection for all Hungarian criminals convicted outside Hungary |url=https://www.historia.ro/sectiune/actualitate/articol/vicepremierul-ungariei-zsolt-semjen-promite-protectie-tuturor-ungurilor-condamnati-penal-in-afara-ungariei |access-date=26 December 2020 |publisher=Historia.ro |language=ro}}</ref> In 2020, both a Romanian newspaper ] as well as a Hungarian newspaper '']'' confirmed that Ernő Barabás is the owner of the ] company.<ref>{{cite web |date=22 April 2020 |title=Exclusiv. Milionarul Iadului: Ernő Barabás, agresorul lui Mihailă Cofar în 1990, trăiește în Ungaria |trans-title=Exclusive. Hell's Millionaire: Ernő Barabás, Mihailă Cofar's aggressor in 1990, lives in Hungary |url=https://evz.ro/exclusiv-milionarul-iadului-erno-barabas-agresorul-lui-mihaila-cofar-in-1990-traieste-in-ungaria.html |access-date=26 December 2020 |publisher=Evz.ro |language=ro}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=15 October 2020 |title=A cukorpiactól Bruce Willisig és még tovább - a Hell Energy és a Barabás család |trans-title=From the sugar market to Bruce Willis and beyond - Hell Energy and the Barabás family |url=https://magyarnarancs.hu/gazdasag/a-hell-energy-es-a-barabas-csalad-134031 |access-date=24 March 2023 |publisher=magyarnarancs.hu |language=hu}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=28 April 2020 |title=Firma HELL Energy confirmă că patronul Ernő Barabás e călăul lui Mihăilă Cofar, românul linșat la Tg. Mureș |trans-title=HELL Energy confirms that the owner Ernő Barabás is the executioner of Mihăilă Cofar, the Romanian lynched at Tg. Mures |url=https://evz.ro/firma-hell-energy-confirma-ca-patronul-erno-barabas-e-calaul-lui-mihaila-cofar-romanul-linsat-la-tg-mures.html |access-date=26 December 2020 |publisher=Evz.ro |language=ro}}</ref>
==Dispute over causes==
{{Unreferenced section|date=June 2013}}
The prevalent opinion in the Romanian public is that the incidents were triggered by direct attacks by Hungarians against Romanian institutions, symbols, statues and policemen. They{{Who|date=February 2010}} claim that the riots were part of a plan to separate part of ] from Romania to reintegrate it with ].{{Citation needed|date=May 2010}}


Most Hungarians maintain, however, that rumours about Hungarian violence against Romanians and/or state institutions were unjustified or widely exaggerated. Hungarians also state that rumours about Hungarian violence were spread to undermine legitimate Hungarian demands (such as language, cultural rights or possible ethnic-based regional autonomy).{{Citation needed|date=May 2010}}
==Dispute over the causes==


==Involvement of Romanian government==
{{Unreferenced section}}
{{unreferenced section|date=November 2014}}
The prevalent opinion among the Romanian public is that the incidents were triggered by direct attacks by ethnic Hungarians against Romanian institutions, symbols, statues and policemen. Certain Romanians link these events with the killings during the ] of Romanian policemen and local government employees in areas with large Hungarian minorities or where Hungarians form a majority. Supporters of such opinions{{Who|date=February 2010}} claim that the riots are part of a plan to separate part of ] from Romania and re-integrate it with ]. {{Citation needed|date=May 2010}}
], President of Romania at the time of the incident]]
The nature of the involvement of the Romanian government is also disputed. The official account is that the government quickly succeeded in calming the situation and ended the clashes. However, that has been disputed:
* Many Hungarians claim that the government was slow to act and failed to stem the violence at the beginning and thus responsible for its escalation. They support their arguments with filmed scenes in which police or other representatives of the authorities overlook events. They also criticise the fact that the vast majority of those taken into custody after the events were ethnic Hungarians, which suggests an ethnic bias.
* Many ethnic Romanians claim that the government did not intervene fast enough to protect the population and that clearly-identified Hungarians involved in the violence were not prosecuted.
According to a 1990 report by ], "the authorities... failed to respond in an adequate manner to protect the citizens of Târgu Mureș".<ref name="nine"/> In this sense, the riots can be seen as a symptom of the fact that police, and the law enforcement agencies in general were very weak and morally compromised at the time because of how the communist regime had fallen. That opinion is reinforced by the similar pattern in some subsequent events (Piața Universității and the ] of ]).


==Involvement of Western media==
Most ethnic Hungarians in Romania and Hungarian public opinion in general maintain, however, that these rumours about Hungarian violence against Romanians and/or state institutions were unjustified or widely exaggerated. Hungarians also state that rumours about ethnic Hungarian violence were spread in order to undermine legitimate demands of ethnic Hungarians (such as language, cultural rights, or possible ethnic-based regional autonomy).{{Citation needed|date=May 2010}}
{{POV|date=December 2021}}
The quality of the Western media's coverage of the riots is contested by many Romanians. An often-cited example is the gruesome footage of Mihăilă Cofariu, who was presented as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians in the documentary ''And the walls came tumbling down: Bad Neighbours'', directed by Peter Swain and produced by ethnic Hungarian Paul Neuberg.<ref name="adevarul">{{cite web|url=http://www.adevarul.ro/actualitate/eveniment/Operatiunea_-Cofariu_0_224977912.html|title=Culisele manipulării conflictului româno-maghiar din 20 martie 1990|date=14 March 2010|access-date=15 March 2010|publisher=Adevărul|language=ro}}</ref> According to its director, the filming crew arrived in Transylvania after the events, and most footage, including that of Mihăilă Cofariu, were provided by the Hungarian producer team, who let them believe that Cofariu was really a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians.<ref name="adevarul"/>


Also, during filming, the crew had no contact at all with any ethnic Romanian, and all documentation was gathered only from Hungarian sources, including some Hungarian contacts from the political scene.<ref name="adevarul"/>
==Romanian government involvement==
]
The nature of the involvement of the Romanian government is also disputed. The official account is that the government quickly succeeded in calming the situation and ended the clashes. However:
* Many members of the Hungarian minority claim that the government was purposely slow to act, failing to stem the violence at the beginning and thus responsible for its escalation. They allegedly support their arguments with filmed scenes, where police or other representatives of the authorities overlook some misdoings. They also criticise the fact that the vast majority of persons taken under custody after the events were ethnic Hungarians, which, in their opinion, suggests an ethnic bias.
* Many members of the Romanian majority claim that the government did not intervene fast enough to protect the population, and that clearly identified Hungarian criminals were not condemned.
According to a 1990 report by ], "the authorities (...) failed to respond in an adequate manner to protect the citizens of Târgu Mureș".<ref name="nine"/> In this sense, the riots can be seen as a symptom of the fact that police and the law enforcement agencies in general were very weak and morally compromised at that time, as a consequence of the way the Communist regime had fallen. This opinion is reinforced by the similar pattern followed by some subsequent events (Piaţa Universităţii and the ] of ]).


Western media, picking up the story from the documentary, presented the Mihăilă Cofariu footage in the same way: as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians. That falsehood is often used in Romanian media to link various similar cases of ] falsehoods in Hungarian and Western media.<ref name="ten">Artificial tensions from Budapest, article in Ziua, 2006 (reference below).</ref>
==Western media involvement==
The quality of Western media coverage of the riots is contested by many Romanians. An often-cited example is the gruesome footage of Mihăilă Cofariu mentioned above who was presented as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians in the documentary 'And the walls came tumbling down: Bad Neighbours', directed by Peter Swain and produced by ethnic Hungarian Paul Neuberg.<ref name="adevarul">{{cite web|url=http://www.adevarul.ro/actualitate/eveniment/Operatiunea_-Cofariu_0_224977912.html|title=Culisele manipulării conflictului româno-maghiar din 20 martie 1990|date=2010-03-14|accessdate=2010-03-15|publisher=Adevărul|language=Romanian}}</ref> According to its director, the filming crew arrived in Transylvania after the events and most footages, including the one of Mihăilă Cofariu, were provided by the Hungarian producer team, who let them believe that Cofariu was in fact a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians.<ref name="adevarul"/> Also, during filming, the crew had no contact at all with any ethnic Romanian, all the documentation being gathered only from Hungarian sources, including some Hungarian contacts from the political scene.<ref name="adevarul"/>


==See also==
Western media, picking up the story from this documentary, presented the Mihăilă Cofariu footage in the same way, as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians. This particular disinformation is often used in Romanian media to link various similar cases of ] disinformation in Hungarian and Western media.<ref name="ten">Artificial tensions from Budapest, article in Ziua, 2006 (reference below).</ref>
*]


==Notes== ==Notes==
Line 49: Line 88:


==References== ==References==
* , Human Rights Watch World Report for the year 1990. The section dealing with Romania contains a description of the events and their context. Accessed 17 Jan 2006. * , Human Rights Watch World Report for the year 1990. The section dealing with Romania contains a description of the events and their context. Accessed 17 Jan 2006.
* , January 31, 1994, US State Department (Archive), ROMANIA HUMAN RIGHTS PRACTICES. Accessed 17 Jan 2006. * , 31 January 1994, US State Department (Archive), Romania Human Rights Practices. Accessed 17 Jan 2006.


==External links== ==External links==
* {{en icon}} Christoffer M. Andersen, (]). September 2005. Senior thesis in politics and Society, New Anglo-American College, Prague. * {{in lang|en}} Christoffer M. Andersen, . September 2005. Senior thesis in politics and Society, New Anglo-American College, Prague.
* {{ro icon}} ("Târgu Mureș 1990 – remembering some unelucidated dramas"), article of divers.ro. * {{in lang|ro}} {{dead link|date=December 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} ("Târgu Mureș 1990 – remembering some unelucidated dramas"), article of divers.ro.
* {{ro icon}} Mihai Mincan, Laurențiu Mihu, ("The truth about three reprobate days"), article in '']'', 8 August 2005. * {{in lang|ro}} Mihai Mincan, Laurențiu Mihu, ("The truth about three reprobate days"), article in '']'', 8 August 2005.
* {{hu icon}} , <!--Could someone please translate title?--> a BBC interview with András Sütő, Hungarian writer. * {{in lang|hu}} , <!--Could someone please translate title?--> a BBC interview with András Sütő, Hungarian writer.
* {{ro icon}} , article in ]. * {{in lang|ro}} , article in ].
*{{ro icon}} , article in ]. *{{in lang|ro}} , article in ].

{{Riots, protests and civil disorder in Romanian territory}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Ethnic clashes of Targu Mures}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Ethnic clashes of Targu Mures}}
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Latest revision as of 09:25, 23 October 2024

1990 period of anti-Hungarian violence in Transylvania, Romania
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The ethnic clashes of Târgu Mureș (also called Black March, Hungarian: Fekete Március) refer to violent incidents between the Hungarians and Romanians in Târgu Mureș and surrounding settlements in Transylvania, Romania in March 1990. The clashes were the bloodiest inter-ethnic incidents of the post-communist era in Transylvania. Târgu Mureș (Hungarian: Marosvásárhely) is a Romanian town with an ethnically mixed population that was almost equally distributed between Romanians and Hungarians after the fall of the communist regime in December 1989. It has been an important cultural and political center for the Hungarian minority in Transylvania.

In March 1990, brief but violent clashes occurred there between the two ethnic groups in the town, involving ethnic Romanians from neighbouring villages. The clashes left 5 people dead and 300 injured. The riots were broadcast nationally on Romanian television and were covered by media around the world.

The exact cause is still widely disputed. The roles of the media and the Romanian government are also questioned.

The events

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Demonstration for Hungarian education
Romanian troops on the streets of Târgu Mureș
Destroyed buses

At the beginning of March 1990, two episodes involving Romanian statues occurred. Graffiti was found on the statue of the Romanian historical figure Avram Iancu, and a statue of another Romanian personality in a neighboring town was stolen. A Romanian newspaper referred to events of the same kind that took place before the 1940 Romanian-Hungarian conflict.

During the celebrations of the Hungarian community on the national day of the Hungarians (15 March), accusations of nationalism and separatism began to be heard from Romanians.

The next day, groups of heavily intoxicated Romanians began to attack state-owned stores in which ethnic Hungarians had changed the signage to include Hungarian. Students sang anti-Hungarian songs and pillaged a Hungarian Protestant church.

On 19 March, Romanian villagers, dispatched by coach and train, arrived in the city and violently attacked the headquarters of the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania. The local Hungarians tried to defend it, and the area fell into violence. The involvement of the Romanian government in connection with the stimulation of ethnic violence is not completely unfounded (Andreescu 2001, Gallagher, 2005).

The media enlarged the tensions and contributed, by inflammatory discourse, to the worsening of the situation. The parliamentary report on the events confirmed that the media reported falsely about the heavy influx of Hungarians to help their co-nationals in their fight for a separate Transylvania. Incitements about "separatist" trends were used in an effort to manufacture ethnic conflict.

Media issues

The events are viewed differently by the sides that were involved. The 16 March incident at "Pharmacy no. 28" is an example of the capacity of the media to present the same event with opposite connotations. A news brief was presented, by both the Romanian and the Hungarian press, both using it to draw attention to the danger represented by the actions of "the others". Romanian media announced that the pharmacist wiped inscriptions in Romanian, and the Hungarian press wrote that the Romanians wiped the Hungarian inscription.

Romanian media

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According to the correspondent of the Romanian television, in the neighbouring town of Sovata, a statue of Nicolae Bălcescu was knocked down, generating vehement protests of Vatra Românească, a far-right, ultranationalistic organization.

Several teams of cameramen from the Romanian army filmed numerous episodes of an explicitly anti-Romanian turn. There were shown groups of Hungarians who chanted "Horthy, Horthy!", "Death to Romanians!" and "Transylvania to Hungary!" A 2010 article from Jurnalul Național talks about the influx of 10,000 Hungarian "tourists" who were officially coming to commemorate the Revolution of 1848. There are accounts in the same period of the desecration of the statues of Avram Iancu, Nicolae Bălcescu and some arson attempts on Romanian houses in Sovata. Such acts have generated counter-manifestations by the Romanian population.

Also, the "road signs war" started and would continue for years throughout Transylvania. One of the Târgu Mureș signs at the entry into the city was replaced with a Marosvasarhely Hungarian sign. The change sparked anger from Azomureș Romanian employees, who restored the Romanian sign.

Hungarian media

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1990 Human Rights Watch report

In March, violence broke out between ethnic Hungarians and Romanians in the Transylvanian city of Târgu Mureș. On 19 March, the headquarters of the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR) was attacked by a large group of ethnic Romanians. The police and army did not respond to the UDMR's calls for protection until several hours after the attack began. Many ethnic Hungarians trapped inside were seriously injured.

On the following morning, some 15,000 ethnic Hungarians gathered in the town square to protest the previous day's events. A group of approximately 3,000 ethnic Romanians hostile to the Hungarians' demands for autonomy began to gather on one side of the square in the early afternoon. Tensions escalated as word spread that buses of ethnic Romanian peasants from neighboring villages were heading toward town to support the Romanians in the square. By 2:30 p.m., the Chief of Police gave assurances to ethnic Romanian and Hungarian leaders in the square that the police had blocked off entrances to the city. However, unconfirmed reports indicated that the police allowed buses of ethnic Romanians through the roadblocks. Romanian peasants from villages outside Târgu Mureş arrived in the town center long after the roads should have been closed, and joined the Romanians already in the square.

Around 5:00 p.m., violence erupted between ethnic Romanians and ethnic Hungarians, breaking the single line of 50 police that the authorities had sent to divide the two groups. Although the police and army had been made aware of the potential for violence by both Hungarian and Romanian leaders, who had made numerous reports of the escalating tensions in the square, the authorities once again failed to respond in an adequate manner to protect the citizens of Târgu Mureș.

According to the US State Department Human Rights Report for 1993:

The UDMR condemned the Supreme Court's 7 June rejection of an appeal in the case of Pal Cseresznyés, an ethnic Hungarian serving a 10-year sentence for attempted murder as a result of his involvement in the Târgu Mureș incidents of March 1990. Cseresznyés participated in the savage beating of an ethnic Romanian, which an international journalist captured on film. The UDMR's complaint centered on the length of his sentence and on the fact that he was the only one of those filmed who was brought to trial. The court maintained that, regardless of the fates of the others involved, Cseresznyes had received a fair trial and was guilty as charged. Thus it found no legal reason to grant an appeal.

Casualties and legal consequences

There were 5 dead (three ethnic Hungarians and two ethnic Romanians) and 278 injured. During the penal investigation and the court trials that followed, two ethnic Hungarians (Pál Cseresznyés and Ernő Barabás) and seven others were convicted.

Emblematic victims

There were victims on both sides, two of which received particular attention:

Hungarian writer András Sütő
  • On 19 March 1990, the Hungarian writer András Sütő was seriously beaten when Romanians attacked the offices of the Democratic Union of Hungarians (UDMR). With several bones broken and being blinded in one eye, he was carried to the Bucharest Military Hospital, then, later, by a military aircraft to Budapest, Hungary, where his life was saved, but he retained a permanent eye injury. The attackers were never officially identified, or convicted.
  • On 20 March 1990, Mihăilă Cofariu, an ethnic Romanian from Ibănești village brought to Târgu Mureș along with others to beat Hungarians was severely beaten even after he fell unconscious. Following that he remained neurologically disabled. The event was presented in international media as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians. He was brought in coma to the county's emergency hospital and spent several months in hospitals in Romania and Germany. One of the perpetrators, ethnic Hungarian Pál Cseresznyés, was tried, convicted and sentenced to 10 years in prison, but he was released in 1996 by Romanian President Emil Constantinescu, as an act of reconciliation. The other convicted perpetrator, Ernő Barabás, emigrated to Hungary. He has also received a 10-year imprisonment sentence, but the Hungarian authorities denied all requests for extradition from the Romanian authorities. In 2020, both a Romanian newspaper Evenimentul Zilei as well as a Hungarian newspaper Magyar Narancs confirmed that Ernő Barabás is the owner of the Hell Energy Drink company.

Dispute over causes

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The prevalent opinion in the Romanian public is that the incidents were triggered by direct attacks by Hungarians against Romanian institutions, symbols, statues and policemen. They claim that the riots were part of a plan to separate part of Transylvania from Romania to reintegrate it with Hungary.

Most Hungarians maintain, however, that rumours about Hungarian violence against Romanians and/or state institutions were unjustified or widely exaggerated. Hungarians also state that rumours about Hungarian violence were spread to undermine legitimate Hungarian demands (such as language, cultural rights or possible ethnic-based regional autonomy).

Involvement of Romanian government

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Ion Iliescu, President of Romania at the time of the incident

The nature of the involvement of the Romanian government is also disputed. The official account is that the government quickly succeeded in calming the situation and ended the clashes. However, that has been disputed:

  • Many Hungarians claim that the government was slow to act and failed to stem the violence at the beginning and thus responsible for its escalation. They support their arguments with filmed scenes in which police or other representatives of the authorities overlook events. They also criticise the fact that the vast majority of those taken into custody after the events were ethnic Hungarians, which suggests an ethnic bias.
  • Many ethnic Romanians claim that the government did not intervene fast enough to protect the population and that clearly-identified Hungarians involved in the violence were not prosecuted.

According to a 1990 report by Human Rights Watch, "the authorities... failed to respond in an adequate manner to protect the citizens of Târgu Mureș". In this sense, the riots can be seen as a symptom of the fact that police, and the law enforcement agencies in general were very weak and morally compromised at the time because of how the communist regime had fallen. That opinion is reinforced by the similar pattern in some subsequent events (Piața Universității and the miners' invasion of Bucharest).

Involvement of Western media

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The quality of the Western media's coverage of the riots is contested by many Romanians. An often-cited example is the gruesome footage of Mihăilă Cofariu, who was presented as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians in the documentary And the walls came tumbling down: Bad Neighbours, directed by Peter Swain and produced by ethnic Hungarian Paul Neuberg. According to its director, the filming crew arrived in Transylvania after the events, and most footage, including that of Mihăilă Cofariu, were provided by the Hungarian producer team, who let them believe that Cofariu was really a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians.

Also, during filming, the crew had no contact at all with any ethnic Romanian, and all documentation was gathered only from Hungarian sources, including some Hungarian contacts from the political scene.

Western media, picking up the story from the documentary, presented the Mihăilă Cofariu footage in the same way: as a Hungarian being beaten by Romanians. That falsehood is often used in Romanian media to link various similar cases of anti-Romanian falsehoods in Hungarian and Western media.

See also

Notes

  1. Ildikó Lipcsey; Sabin Gherman; Adrian Severin (2006). Romania and Transylvania in the 20th Century. Corvinus Pub. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-882785-15-5.
  2. ^ Anamaria Dutceac Segesten, Myth, Identity, and Conflict: A Comparative Analysis of Romanian and Serbian Textbooks , Lexington Books, 2011, ISBN 9780739148679
  3. Guntram Henrik Herb; David H. Kaplan, eds. (1999). Nested Identities: Nationalism, Territory, and Scale. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 279. ISBN 978-0-8476-8467-0.
  4. Stroschein, Sherrill (2012). Ethnic Struggle, Coexistence, and Democratization in Eastern Europe. London: Cambridge University Press. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-107-00524-2.
  5. (Romanian) http://adevarul.ro/locale/targu-mures/targu-mures-conflictul-martie-90-fost-fortat-presa-1_50bd3ed47c42d5a663c8fcef/index.html
  6. "Corespondentul TVR Dorin Suciu, despre Revoluţie şi incidentele din martie 1990 de la Tg. Mureş". Archived from the original on 29 June 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  7. ^ (Romanian) http://jurnalul.ro/special-jurnalul/escaladarea-conflictelor-din-targu-mures-farmacia-si-trabantul-538671.html Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Human Rights Watch World Report for the year 1990.
  9. Human Rights Report, 31 January 1994, US State Department.
  10. Bustan, René (2007). Les relations roumano-hongroises dans la perspective de la construction ... ISBN 9782748335705. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  11. "Ethnic Hungarian Writer and Activist Andras Suto, 79". The Washington Post. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  12. Kincses, Előd (9 June 2021). "Véres virradattal a magyar-román együttélés ellen" [With a bloody dawn against Hungarian-Romanian coexistence]. Mandiner.
  13. Udvardy, Frigyes. "A romániai magyar kisebbség történeti kronológiája 1990-2017" [The chronology of the Hungarian minority in Romania 1990-2017]. Erdélyi Magyar Adatbank (Translyvanian Hungarian Database).
  14. "Romania libera - stiri iesite din tipar - actualitate, investigatii, politica, cultura, diaspora, video, anunturi de mica publicitate". RomaniaLibera.ro. Archived from the original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  15. "Vicepremierul Ungariei, Zsolt Semjén, promite protecţie tuturor ungurilor condamnaţi penal în afara Ungariei" [Hungarian Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjén promises protection for all Hungarian criminals convicted outside Hungary] (in Romanian). Historia.ro. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  16. "Exclusiv. Milionarul Iadului: Ernő Barabás, agresorul lui Mihailă Cofar în 1990, trăiește în Ungaria" [Exclusive. Hell's Millionaire: Ernő Barabás, Mihailă Cofar's aggressor in 1990, lives in Hungary] (in Romanian). Evz.ro. 22 April 2020. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  17. "A cukorpiactól Bruce Willisig és még tovább - a Hell Energy és a Barabás család" [From the sugar market to Bruce Willis and beyond - Hell Energy and the Barabás family] (in Hungarian). magyarnarancs.hu. 15 October 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  18. "Firma HELL Energy confirmă că patronul Ernő Barabás e călăul lui Mihăilă Cofar, românul linșat la Tg. Mureș" [HELL Energy confirms that the owner Ernő Barabás is the executioner of Mihăilă Cofar, the Romanian lynched at Tg. Mures] (in Romanian). Evz.ro. 28 April 2020. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  19. ^ "Culisele manipulării conflictului româno-maghiar din 20 martie 1990" (in Romanian). Adevărul. 14 March 2010. Retrieved 15 March 2010.
  20. Artificial tensions from Budapest, article in Ziua, 2006 (reference below).

References

  • Romania, Human Rights Developments, Human Rights Watch World Report for the year 1990. The section dealing with Romania contains a description of the events and their context. Accessed 17 Jan 2006.
  • 1993 Human Rights Report, 31 January 1994, US State Department (Archive), Romania Human Rights Practices. Accessed 17 Jan 2006.

External links

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